- Grigoraş Dinicu
Grigoraş Dinicu (
April 3 ,1889 –March 28 ,1949 ) was aRomania n Romacomposer andviolinist . He is most famous for his often-played virtuosoviolin showpiece "Hora staccato " (1906) and for making popular the tune Ciocârlia.Jascha Heifetz once said that Grigoraş Dinicu was the greatest violinist he had ever heard. In the 1930s he was involved in the political movement of the Romanian Roma and was made honorary president of the "General Union of the Romanian Roma" [ [http://www.edu.ro/index.php?module=uploads&func=download&fileId=1626 Istoria romilor] ] .He was born in
Bucharest . He attended the Bucharest Conservatory, where he studied with Kiriac-Georgescu; the most famous of his teachers wasCarl Flesch , the violin pedagogue, with whom he studied in 1902. After graduation he played violin with the Orchestra of the Ministry of Public Instruction, and also performed as a soloist. "Hora staccato" dates from the beginning of this period; he wrote it as a graduation exercise. For forty years, from 1906 until 1946, he directed popular music concerts. He also toured abroad as a soloist and conductor, and he also played a great deal of light music in nightclubs, hotels, restaurants, and cafés in Bucharest and throughout Western Europe.His music is mostly for violin and
piano , though some pieces (such as "Hora staccato") have later been arranged for other combinations of instruments (for example,trumpet and piano, as well as violin and orchestra). Other works of Dinicu's, all in a light, in Romanian or in Roma styles, include "Hora spiccato", "Hora de concert", "Hora mărţişorului" ("Mărţişor", literally "little March", is a major Romanian seasonal holiday onMarch 1 ), "Hora de la Chiţorani" ("Hora from Chiţorani", a town in Prahova county), "Hora Expoziţiei de la Paris" ("Hora of theParis Exposition "), "Improvisation à la Dinicu" ("Improvisation in the style of Dinicu"), "Orientale à la tzigane" ("Orientale" in Gypsy style"), and "Sârba lui Tanţi" ("Tanţi's sârba"; asârba is another type of Romanian dance).He died in Bucharest.
References and further reading
* Andrew Lamb: "Grigoraş Dinicu", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed November 13, 2005), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
* "The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians", 8th ed. Revised by Nicolas Slonimsky. New York, Schirmer Books, 1993. ISBN 002872416X
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